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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20150402:14:35:00

mandate that. bill: on website for the station restaurant denies services to same-sex couples. it never happened. it did not take place. it was just a camera there at counter. >> that is disgraceful. anybody putting out death threats this is horrible. you should leave the pizzeria alone. disgraceful people put out death threats. doug to your point back in the '50s and '60s, people would use religion to cater or accommodate interracial marriage t happened all the time. if you kind of wedding you should cater any kind of wedding or don't cater? >> i grew up not too far away from woolworths in north carolina. they were fighting to sit at counter. >> how is this different from loving versus virginia, enshrined, no discrimination against interracial marriage into law? how is this different? people would say you can't mix races. bible says races were created different. >> but they were separate water

Cool-story , Anybody , Death-threats , Place , Pizzeria , Camera , Couples , Services , Station-restaurant , Sex , Website , People

At This Hour With Berman and Michaela-20140527-15:58:00

next, we talk about mr. rogers who really embodies the innocence of the decade. >> an icon who started in the '60s. we're very honored that the heinz history center in pittsburgh donated his clothing to this exhibit and it speaks of a calmness, the growth of television, and the involvement of children. >> and juxtapose that calmness to the volatility that was happening in reality. the social change happening all around everyone in this country. the two parts of this exhibit i want to make sure we get to before we get back to you guys, the stools with the civil rights movement and the bench in the jail martin luther king jr. sat on. >> these are important artifacts that symbolize the civil rights movement of the 1960s. the four stools we see here come from the greensboro historical museum. they were at the lunch counter, the woolworths lunch counter

Rogers , Mr , Innocence , Icon , Clothing , Heinz-history-center , Pittsburgh , 60 , Exhibit , Change , Volatility , Television

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130612:08:02:00

picture, the store is gone. in its place is a bunch of redeveloped stuff including a parking garage. that old place with all the restaurants crowded around in that neighborhood. not just the woolworths. that place is gone. the southern part of the united states did get forced to abolish its segregation laws, but it was a bloody, bloody fight. throughout the old confederacy, white people were asked first as a matter of conscience, and then finally they were ordered as a matter of justice to integrate on racial lines. and when the white people who had control of the laws and the government and the schools and the businesses, when the fight to hold on to segregation laws was a lost fight and they knew they had no choice but to integrate the society they lived in, in many cases instead of going through with that and living through that kind of change, a lot of them just decided to quit that society. they gave up public pools and public schools and in some cases movie theaters. they gave up whole cities and

Place , Stuff , Store , Restaurants , Bunch , Neighborhood , Picture , Woolworths , Parking-garage , People , Part , Segregation-laws

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130612:08:01:00

could sit down and order, even take their time going over the menu in a place like this. except for the fact that that store where those particular protesters wanted to eat back in 1960, that store closed a long time ago. finally, a few years ago, civil rights museum was able to open in what had been the long vacant old storefront from that. here we have another attempt to buy lunch in jackson, mississippi, the state capital, in 1963. this time the group included white people and african-americans sitting down together at that lunch counter in violation of both the unofficial social code and the official law. and bringing upon themselves the outrage and ridicule and abuse of the mob that gathered around them. today that same mix-raced group could eat in that same place without fearing for their safety because that place, like all american restaurants, would be an integrated restaurant now. they put a historic marker at that site just the other day. 50 years of the sit-in at that woolworths in jackson, mississippi. as you can see from this

Place , Store , Fact , Menu , Order , Storefront , Protesters , Civil-rights-museum , 1960 , Medgar-evers-born-in-mississippi , People , Group

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130612:04:09:00

not come in. it was the day that president kennedy pleaded with the nation for a civil rights act. 50 years ago today. and 50 years ago tonight, just after midnight, with the woolworths mob still fresh in the headlines and the reports of the alabama governor in the schoolhouse door and president kennedy making that speech on civil rights, with those reports not yet published in the morning papers, after midnight, 50 years ago, medgar ever was was killed. mr. evers was gunned down in his driveway in jackson, mississippi, when he pulled up to his house after an naacp meeting had run late. they taught their kids to drop to the floor at the sound of gunfire. after they heard the shots that night, hit the floor, they got up and opened the door, there was medgar evers, husband, father, dying. his car keys were still in his hand along with a stack of t-shirts that said "jim crow must go." there was no conviction in his murder for another 30 years. medgar evers was never as famous as martin luther king or rosa

Governor , Mob , President-kennedy , Rights , Woolworths , Alabama , Reports , Nation , Headlines , Schoolhouse-door , 50 , Medgar-evers-born-in-mississippi

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130612:08:09:00

it was the day that president kennedy pleaded with the nation for a civil rights act. 50 years ago today. and 50 years ago tonight, just after midnight, with the woolworths mob still fresh in the headlines and the reports of the alabama governor in the schoolhouse door and president kennedy making that speech on civil rights, with those reports not yet published in the morning papers, after midnight, 50 years ago, medgar ever was was killed. mr. evers was gunned down in his driveway in jackson, mississippi, when he pulled up to his house after an naacp meeting had run late. they taught their kids to drop to the floor at the sound of gunfire. after they heard the shots that night, hit the floor, they got up and opened the door, there was medgar evers, husband, father, dying. his car keys were still in his hand along with a stack of t-shirts that said "jim crow must go." there was no conviction in his murder for another 30 years. medgar evers was never as famous as martin luther king or rosa

Governor , Mob , President-kennedy , Rights , Reports , Alabama , Woolworths , Nation , Speech , Headlines , Schoolhouse-door , 50

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130612:04:01:00

take their time going over the menu in a place like this. except for the fact that that store where those particular protesters wanted to eat back in 1960, that store closed a long time ago. finally, a few years ago, civil rights museum was able to open in what had been the long vacant old storefront from that. here we have another attempt to buy lunch in jackson, mississippi, the state capital, in 1963. this time the group included white people and african-americans sitting down together at that lunch counter in violation of both the unofficial social code and the official law. and bringing upon themselves the outrage and ridicule and abuse of the mob that gathered around them. today that same mix-raced group could eat in that same place without fearing for their safety because that place, like all american restaurants, would be an integrated restaurant now. they put a historic marker at that site just the other day. 50 years of the sit-in at that woolworths in jackson, mississippi.

Place , Store , Fact , Menu , Storefront , Protesters , Civil-rights-museum , 1960 , Medgar-evers-born-in-mississippi , Group , African-american , People

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130612:01:09:00

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130612:01:09:00
vimarsana.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vimarsana.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

M-mississip-mississippi , African-american , Governor , Leave , Door , Body , Alabama , Students , University-of-alabama , 50 , Mob , President-kennedy

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130612:01:02:00

without fearing for their safety because that place, like all american restaurants, would be an integrated restaurant now. they put a historic marker at that site just the other day. 50 years of the sit-in at that wol wolworth's in jackson, m mississip mississippi. as you can see from this picture, the store is gone. in its place is a bunch of redeveloped stuff including a parking garage. that old place with all the restaurants crowded around in that neighborhood. not just the woolworths. that place is gone. the southern part of the united states did get forced to abolish its segregation laws, but it was a bloody, bloody fight. throughout the old confederacy, white people were asked first as a matter of conscience, and then finally they were ordered as a matter of justice to integrate on racial lines. and when the white people who had control of the laws and the government and the schools and the businesses, when the fight to hold on to segregation laws was a lost fight and they knew

Place , Restaurants , Sit-in , Safety , Marker , Restaurant , Site , All-american , 50 , M-mississip-mississippi , Stuff , Store